All Ops & safety articles – Page 1358

  • News

    Alliances key to competitive edge

    1996-09-02T15:08:00Z

    The concept of ‘global alliances' between airlines has become increasingly evident in the past three years, according to KPMG International Airline Group. This is one of the findings of a survey of 24 international airline CFOs. The report, Strategic Issues and Current Trends in the International Airline Industry, ...

  • News

    Set-up moves into the fast lane

    1996-09-02T10:28:00Z

    Binocular-toting ‘spotters' must have thought Farnborough ‘96 was cancelled when they saw no sign of major activity on the airfield site this summer. It normally takes at least six months to build the exhibition halls and chalets that make up the show ‘village'. This year the company in ...

  • News

    Load factors

    1996-09-02T10:20:00Z

    A unique computer tool which allows users to predict the workloads faced by air traffic controllers has been pioneered by Roke Manor Research, Siemens' centre of excellence for research and development in the UK. The Performance and Usability Modelling for Air traffic management (PUMA), developed under contract to the ...

  • News

    Webbed feat

    1996-09-02T10:17:00Z

    Am-Safe has signed a ‘belting' deal to help improve passenger safety. Phoenix-based Am-Safe, a leading supplier of aviation seat belts and restraints, has purchased the assets of webbing maker Technical Textiles. The acquisition, announced at the Show, improved Am-Safe's capability to respond to a changing market requirements for ...

  • News

    Safety first

    1996-09-01T09:41:00Z

    British Midland's parent, Airlines of Britain Holdings, has hired Frank Turner, the former managing director of Lucas Aerospace, to oversee the group's maintenance and engineering operation. The new post was created following a review of procedures after bad maintenance led to an emergency landing by a B737 last year - ...

  • News

    Starting over

    1996-09-01T00:00:00Z

    The second wave of US new entrant airlines is proving more resilient than the first and some venture capitalists are now looking at Europe. Russell Winter offers a formula to make sure aspiring low-cost startups, especially in Europe, find financial backers with deep pockets.Many industry specialists continue to believe that ...

  • News

    Washington now Virgin territory?

    1996-09-01T00:00:00Z

    As Virgin Atlantic makes its presence felt in the US-UK open skies negotiations, Washington's commonly held wisdom that British Airways holds nearly complete sway over the UK's international aviation policy is being put to the test. BA, which wants an open skies pact so it can seek antitrust ...

  • News

    ValuJet's long shadow

    1996-09-01T00:00:00Z

    US The crash of ValuJet Flight 592 in May has had more impact on the US airline industry than any other commercial aviation tragedy. Mead Jennings explores the longer-term repercussions of the ValuJet affair. The repercussions of the crash of a 27-year-old ValuJet Airlines DC-9 in Florida's Everglades, which killed ...

  • News

    Off to a head start

    1996-09-01T00:00:00Z

    After a long wait, deregulation in Europe has spawned a growing number of startup carriers which are now providing a serious challenge to the majors. Lois Jones reports Until now, startup carriers have tended to provoke no more than a bemused glance from Europe's old timers. But the ...

  • News

    United goes soft on fifths

    1996-09-01T00:00:00Z

    A softening of United Airlines' opposition to limiting fifth freedom traffic beyond Japan could yet signal a breakthrough in the acrimonious dispute that has stalled passenger talks with the US. The signal came in unprepared remarks by United's chief executive Gerald Greenwald, on which the carrier has declined ...

  • News

    Fans support spreads

    1996-09-01T00:00:00Z

    The benefits of the Future Air Navigation System have been slow in coming, but now they are tantalisingly close to being realised and more countries are rallying to the cause.

  • News

    Qantas faces union threat

    1996-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Qantas's management is facing confrontation with unions over a new wage agreement as it launches a drive to try to control costs and improve on disappointing productivity gains. Flight attendants and ground workers have already hinted at industrial action if they fail to win agreement on across the ...

  • News

    North open by year end?

    1996-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Iata claims to have brokered an agreement to open North Korean airspace to all carriers from December, producing annual savings to effected carriers of US$125 million through flight time savings. The breakthrough comes after 18 months of talks between Iata and Pyongyang. But the scheme may yet face ...

  • News

    Dual policy is under fire

    1996-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Less than two years after its launch, Canada's restrictive policy for dual designation of Canadian carriers on international routes is under serious attack. Air Canada and a coalition of charter carriers have intensified their campaign for a more open designation system, leading some officials to predict that the policy could ...

  • News

    More dirty tricks and legal twists

    1996-09-01T00:00:00Z

    In Europe, a volley of legal attacks by airlines on their competitors has been launched. In the US, hard on the heels of KLM's spat with alliance partner Northwest, USAir has declared legal war on its partner, British Airways. If your aviation lawyer is not involved in either ...

  • News

    Delta stokes fires in east

    1996-09-01T00:00:00Z

    With the launch of its low-fare Express concept, Delta Air Lines will want to avoid repeating the disastrous low-fare Continental Lite experience on the US east coast and mirror that of the Shuttle by United, whose performance has been good enough for United to give it a dedicated fleet of ...

  • News

    Financial data

    1996-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Air Canada's operating profit fell from US$33m to US$27m as domestic yields fell, but the sale of Continental Airlines shares netted C$129 million. America West's record quarterly earnings came as traffic grew 13.8%, load factors rose 3.3 points, yields jumped 4.1%, and unit costs fell 7.5%. ...

  • News

    Cost-cutters save more

    1996-09-01T00:00:00Z

    As Lufthansa launches an interim cost-cutting campaign to offset a weak first half performance, Swissair aims to cut salaries by 5 per cent after agreeing a pay deal with its pilots. Lufthansa is looking to save DM190 million ($130 million) in the second half of 1996, following a ...

  • News

    China's links are at stake

    1996-09-01T00:00:00Z

    The clearing of the aeropolitical clouds over Hong Kong may be having a downwind effect in Taiwan, where direct air links with China (PRC) are moving from political rhetoric to actual preparation. Wang Guixiang, chairman of China National Aviation Corporation and new chairman of Dragonair, was the first ...